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Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (Hong Kong)
Thursday, August 20 2020 - 11:09
AsiaNet
US FDA Awards Fast Track Designation (FTD) to Paxalisib for Glioblastoma
SYDNEY, Aug. 20, 2020/PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Kazia Therapeutics Limited (ASX: KZA; NASDAQ: KZIA), an Australian 
oncology-focused biotechnology company, is pleased to announce that the United 
States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Fast Track Designation 
(FTD) to Kazia's paxalisib (formerly GDC-0084) for the treatment of 
glioblastoma, the most common and most aggressive form of primary brain cancer.

Key Points

- Fast Track Designation (FTD) is designed to expedite development of 
pharmaceutical products which demonstrate the potential to address unmet 
medical needs in serious or life-threatening conditions 
- FTD provides Kazia with substantially enhanced access to FDA, including 
opportunities for face-to-face meetings and written consultation throughout the 
remaining development of paxalisib 
- Drugs with FTD are eligible to apply for Accelerated Approval and Priority 
Review at the time of a New Drug Application (NDA) submission, which may result 
in faster product approval 
- FTD also allows for 'rolling review', whereby Kazia may submit completed 
sections of the paxalisib NDA as they become available, rather than at the end 
of development 
- Kazia consequently plans to begin initial preparatory activities for NDA 
filing for paxalisib in CY2021

Kazia CEO, Dr James Garner, commented, "in awarding Fast Track Designation to 
paxalisib, FDA has recognised the drug's potential to meaningfully improve 
outcomes for patients with glioblastoma. This is a very powerful 
acknowledgement. The opportunities that Fast Track Designation creates, as we 
move towards an NDA filing, are of great value and have the potential to 
substantially accelerate the commercialisation of paxalisib. In particular, the 
'rolling review' process enables Kazia to complete and submit substantial 
sections of our NDA filing in advance, saving time and reducing risk for the 
product. We look forward to working closely with FDA as we move into the final 
stage of development for paxalisib."

The specific indication for which FTD has been approved is "for the treatment 
of patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma with unmethylated 
O6-Methylguaninemethyltransferase (MGMT) promotor status who have completed 
initial radiation with concomitant temozolomide." This language precisely 
reflects the patient population studied in the ongoing phase II study, and is 
the primary proposed population for the GBM AGILE pivotal study, and is the 
intended indication at commercial launch.

Kazia announced on 7 August 2020 that FDA had granted paxalisib Rare Pediatric 
Disease Designation (RPDD) for DIPG, an aggressive childhood brain cancer. For 
clarity, this granting of FTD for glioblastoma is not specifically connected to 
the prior granting of RPDD in DIPG.

Fast Track Designation

Introduced under the FDA Modernization Act (1997), Fast Track Designation (FTD) 
may be awarded by FDA to investigational drugs which treat a serious or 
life-threatening condition, and which fill an unmet medical need. FDA notes 
that 'the purpose [of the Fast Track program] is to get important new drugs to 
the patient earlier.'[1] FTD must be requested by the sponsor company and must 
be accompanied by a detailed review of both preclinical and clinical data. To 
be awarded FTD, drugs must generally be able to show some potential advantage 
over existing therapies, either in terms of safety or efficacy.

The key benefits of FTD comprise enhanced access to FDA, with regular and more 
frequent opportunities for consultation and discussion. In addition, drugs with 
FTD may be eligible for Accelerated Approval, in which a new medicine is 
approved prior to the availability of definitive data, and Priority Review, in 
which the standard 12-month review process is reduced to six months. Drugs with 
FTD may also enter a 'rolling review' of their NDA submission, in which 
sections are submitted and reviewed as they become available, substantially 
expediting the approval process.

Next Steps

Kazia completed recruitment to its phase II clinical trial of paxalisib in 
newly diagnosed glioblastoma in February 2020, and interim clinical data was 
presented at the American Association of Cancer Research (AACR) Virtual Annual 
Meeting II in June 2020. Overall survival was calculated at 17.7 months, which 
compares favourably to a historical figure of 12.7 months for temozolomide, the 
existing FDA-approved standard of care.

Kazia expects to present further data from this study in 2H CY2020, and to 
conclude the study in early CY2021.

Paxalisib has been selected to join the international GBM AGILE pivotal study 
in glioblastoma, and recruitment is expected to begin in 2H CY2020.

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[1] 
https://www.fda.gov/patients/fast-track-breakthrough-therapy-accelerated-approval-priority-review/fast-track


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SOURCE: Kazia Therapeutics Ltd